Low & Slow: Lowrider Culture On The Border

Low & Slow: Lowrider Culture On The Border

In El Paso, Texas or Chuco, Tejas, the Lowrider is more than a weekend hobby. Lowriding is a way of life. It is not subculture to the Mexican American experience but part of a complex form of lived history and visual culture. It is a unique iteration of a deeply rooted tradition in auto-mobility. In El Paso, the lowrider could trace its earliest roots to the 1940s, most notably after the Second World War. Arguably, the trend originated in California and made its way to Texas. With the resurgence of full-scale car production after the war, affordable vehicles allowed the working class to access their own ranflas. By the 1970’s, lowriding was a well-known past time representative of a unique brand of “Americanness.” Lowriders were also part of a larger expression that included pachucos/pachucas with their zoot suit styling and cruising. This included an affinity for listening to “oldies.’’ The lowrider lifestyle with all its panache and florid expression is also a form of self-determination in the American visual landscape: a belief that Mexican-Americans resist mainstream aesthetics in favor of their own canon. In other words, to ride on one’s own terms, low & slow with ‘stilo. Low and Slow: Lowrider Culture on the Border has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Exploring the human endeavor. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this exhibition, do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: El Paso Museum of History

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Sun Bowl Queen Coronation 1966

Coronation of the Sun Queen 1966 with the theme " Splendor In ...

DIGIE

Members of the IT Department of the City of El Paso observing ...

DIGIE

Ernesto Arriola, Elia Saenz, and Eli Nevares,Members of the IT ...

DIGIE

Staff members of the El Paso Museum of History observing the ...

DIGIE

To the left is Alan Smith the Director of Exhibitions for the ...

DIGIE

Members of the IT Department of the City of El Paso.

DIGIE

Left to Right Ernesto Arriola, Elia Saenz, and Eli Nevares; ...

DIGIE

Pride G.C. company construction workers from left to right Ramon ...

DIGIE - El Paso, Texas - 2015

Pride G.C. company construction workers from left to right ...

DIGIE

Director of the Museum Julia Bussinger using the Digital Wall ...

DIGIE

Director of the Museum Julia Bussinger using the Digital Wall ...

DIGIE

Director of the Museum Julia Bussinger using the Digital Wall ...

DIGIE

Director of the Museum Julia Bussinger using the Digital Wall ...

DIGIE

Staff Member of the El Paso Museum of History using the Digital ...

DIGIE

Pride G.C. company construction workers observing and using the ...

DIGIE

From left to right Director of Exhibitions Gibson Group Alan ...

DIGIE

Staff Member of the El Paso Museum of History using the Digital ...

DIGIE

Senior Curator Barbara Angus using the Digital Wall for the ...

DIGIE

From left to right, Director of Exhibitions of the Gibson Group ...

DIGIE

From left to right Director of Exhibitions Gibson Group Allan ...

DIGIE

From left to right, Senior Curator Barbara Angus and Staff ...

DIGIE

Director of the Museum Julia Bussinger using the Digital Wall ...

DIGIE

Director of the Museum Julia Bussinger using the Digital Wall ...

home.search_collection